Tri-Covenant Civil Society Watch — Taiwan

Civic monitoring platform integrating CEDAW (Women's), CRC (Child), and CRPD (Disability) watchdog systems · Built on shared open-source evidence_pipeline (Wave 100–109)

中文 (zh-TW) · English
2,047
government documents
102,167
FTS5-indexed passages
1,309
PI ↔ evidence linkages

📚 What this platform does

This system is operated by AABE Coalition in Taiwan, integrating three civil society watchdog platforms — one per UN treaty body — under a shared technical backbone (evidence_pipeline.py):

Each platform retains its own issue framework, advocacy stance, and host organization. The shared system enables cross-covenant comparison — finding intersectional gaps invisible to any single covenant.

♀ CEDAW (Women's Rights)

Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women

Host: Taiwan Mommies Family & Children Coalition

Acceded 2007 · 4 review cycles · 5th in preparation (2026)

→ CEDAW public site
IndicatorCount
Documents394
Passages indexed29,638
Policy Issues (PI)18
PI ↔ evidence linkages424
Concluding Observations212
Stakeholders mapped63

☻ CRC (Child Rights)

Convention on the Rights of the Child

Host: AABE Coalition for Education Action

Acceded 2014 · 2 review cycles · 3rd in progress

→ CRC public site
IndicatorCount
Documents485
Passages indexed69,231
Policy Issues (PI)14
PI ↔ evidence linkages714
Concluding Observations170
Stakeholders mapped56

⚙ CRPD (Disability Rights)

Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities

Host: Disability NGO coalition (in formation)

Acceded 2014 · 2 review cycles · 3rd in preparation

→ CRPD public site
IndicatorCount
Documents1,168
Passages indexed3,298
Policy Issues (PI)16
PI ↔ evidence linkages171
Stakeholders mapped

🔬 Cross-covenant findings (highlights)

Selected findings from the shared analytical platform — invisible to any single covenant NGO:

TopicCEDAWCRCCRPDInsight
Reasonable accommodation (合理調整) 100173 7 CRPD's core concept appears least in CRPD government documents — structural under-representation
Disabled women (CEDAW × CRPD) 1903 0 Despite CEDAW GR-18 on disabled women, no CRPD government document discusses this intersection
Domestic violence (家庭暴力) 459515 1 Disabled women's intersectional vulnerability to violence absent from CRPD policy discourse
SOGIESC framing (LGBTI/性別認同/etc.) 1,491418297 Concentrated in women's policy (CEDAW); 100× higher rate of expansion than CRC/CRPD
Disabled indigenous (3-covenant intersection) 01 0 Triple-axis intersection completely absent across all government discourse

🌐 Why integrate three watchdogs?

Single-covenant NGOs structurally cannot detect these gaps. A women's rights NGO does not regularly read CRPD government reports; a disability rights NGO does not survey CEDAW frequency. Only when datasets are unified can we identify topics that every covenant treats as "the other's responsibility" — what UN human rights mechanisms call intersectional gaps.

This platform provides civil society and treaty body reviewers with empirical evidence of:

  1. Where government discourse converges or diverges across covenants
  2. Which intersectional populations (disabled women, LGBTI children, indigenous women, etc.) are systematically under-discussed
  3. How tracked terminology (LGBTI, "reasonable accommodation", etc.) evolves over time per covenant
  4. Which civil society advocacy events have triggered policy changes (or have not)

🛠 Open-source infrastructure

evidence_pipeline.py — a 900-line Python module with 8 classes (Fetcher, MarkdownExtractor, SiteCrawler, DocumentImporter, PassageIngester, EvidenceLinker, FrequencyAnalyzer, EvidenceInjector). Same MD5 across 3 platforms. Per-platform configuration via PipelineConfig dataclass.

Future planned open-sourcing: github.com/naer-tw/evidence-pipeline with full English documentation, inviting contributors from other covenants (ICCPR / ICESCR / CAT / CERD).

← Read in 中文